The warming of the California current system: Dynamics and ecosystem implications

被引:151
|
作者
Di Lorenzo, E
Miller, AJ
Schneider, N
McWilliams, JC
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Diego, Scripps Inst Oceanog, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA
[2] Univ Hawaii Manoa, Int Pacific Res Ctr, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA
[3] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Inst Geophys & Planetary Phys, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1175/JPO-2690.1
中图分类号
P7 [海洋学];
学科分类号
0707 ;
摘要
Long-term changes in the observed temperature and salinity along the southern California coast are studied using a four-dimensional space-time analysis of the 52-yr (1949-2000) California Cooperative Oceanic Fisheries Investigations (CalCOFI) hydrography combined with a sensitivity analysis of an eddy-permitting primitive equation ocean model under various forcing scenarios. An overall warming trend of 1.3 degrees C in the ocean surface, a deepening in the depth of the mean thermocline (18 m), and increased stratification between 1950 and 1999 are found to be primarily forced by large-scale decadal fluctuations in surface heat fluxes combined with horizontal advection by the mean currents. After 1998 the surface heat fluxes suggest the beginning of a period of cooling, consistent with colder observed ocean temperatures. Salinity changes are decoupled from temperature and appear to be controlled locally in the coastal ocean by horizontal advection by anomalous currents. A cooling trend of -0.5 degrees C in SST is driven in the ocean model by the 50-yr NCEP wind reanalysis, which contains a positive trend in upwelling-favorable winds along the southern California coast. A net warming trend of +1 degrees C in SST occurs, however, when the effects of observed surface heat fluxes are included as forcing functions in the model. Within 50-100 km of the coast, the ocean model simulations show that increased stratification/deepening of the thermocline associated with the warming reduces the efficiency of coastal upwelling in advecting subsurface waters to the ocean surface, counteracting any effects of the increased strength of the upwelling winds. Such a reduction in upwelling efficiency leads in the model to a freshening of surface coastal waters. Because salinity and nutrients at the coast have similar distributions this must reflect a reduction of the nutrient supply at the coast, which is manifestly important in explaining the observed decline in zooplankton concentration. The increased winds also drive an intensification of the mean currents of the southern California Current System (SCCS). Model mesoscale eddy variance significantly increases in recent decades in response to both the stronger upwelling winds and the warmer upper-ocean temperatures, suggesting that the stability properties of the SCCS have also changed.
引用
收藏
页码:336 / 362
页数:27
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Eddy-resolving simulation of plankton ecosystem dynamics in the California Current System
    Gruber, Nicolas
    Frenzel, Hartmut
    Doney, Scott C.
    Marchesiello, Patrick
    McWilliams, James C.
    Moisan, John R.
    Oram, John J.
    Plattner, Gian-Kasper
    Stolzenbach, Keith D.
    DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART I-OCEANOGRAPHIC RESEARCH PAPERS, 2006, 53 (09) : 1483 - 1516
  • [2] Enhanced nutrient supply to the California Current Ecosystem with global warming and increased stratification in an earth system model
    Rykaczewski, Ryan R.
    Dunne, John P.
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2010, 37
  • [3] ON THE DYNAMICS OF THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM
    MCCREARY, JP
    KUNDU, PK
    CHAO, SY
    JOURNAL OF MARINE RESEARCH, 1987, 45 (01) : 1 - 32
  • [4] Impact of assimilating physical oceanographic data on modeled ecosystem dynamics in the California Current System
    Raghukumar, Kaustubha
    Edwards, Christopher A.
    Goebel, Nicole L.
    Broquet, Gregoire
    Veneziani, Milena
    Moore, Andrew M.
    Zehr, Jon P.
    PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY, 2015, 138 : 546 - 558
  • [5] CALIFORNIA SEA LIONS: AN INDICATOR FOR INTEGRATED ECOSYSTEM ASSESSMENT OF THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT SYSTEM
    Melin, Sharon R.
    Orr, Anthony J.
    Harris, Jeffrey D.
    Laake, Jeffrey L.
    DeLong, Robert L.
    CALIFORNIA COOPERATIVE OCEANIC FISHERIES INVESTIGATIONS REPORTS, 2012, 53 : 140 - 152
  • [6] Temporal dynamics and distributions of sardine and anchovy in the southern California Current Ecosystem
    Tran, Bryant
    Barton, Andrew D.
    Muhling, Barbara
    Semmens, Brice X.
    Erisman, Brad
    Craig, Matthew T.
    Jimenez-Rosenberg, Sylvia P. A.
    Aceves-Medina, Gerardo
    Thompson, Andrew R.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 2025, 82
  • [7] An emergent community ecosystem model applied to the California Current System
    Goebel, Nicole L.
    Edwards, Christopher A.
    Zehr, Jonathan P.
    Follows, Michael J.
    JOURNAL OF MARINE SYSTEMS, 2010, 83 (3-4) : 221 - 241
  • [8] Equilibrium structure and dynamics of the California Current System
    Marchesiello, P
    McWilliams, JC
    Shchepetkin, A
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY, 2003, 33 (04) : 753 - 783
  • [9] Environmental variability and krill abundance in the central California current: Implications for ecosystem monitoring
    Dorman, Jeffrey G.
    Sydeman, William J.
    Thompson, Sarah Ann
    Warren, Joseph D.
    Killeen, Helen J.
    Hoover, Brian A.
    Field, John C.
    Santora, Jarrod A.
    FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE, 2023, 10
  • [10] ECOSYSTEM MODELING FOR THE CALIFORNIA CURRENT INTEGRATED ECOSYSTEM ASSESSMENT
    Kaplan, Isaac
    CALIFORNIA COOPERATIVE OCEANIC FISHERIES INVESTIGATIONS REPORTS, 2012, 53 : 89 - 90